
Lake Oroville
Fishing Pressure Light for Kings and Rainbows Despite Great Bite
OROVILLE – Since so many anglers are fishing the Feather River for the chance to catch their first river salmon in 3 years, fishing reports from Lake Oroville have been scarce.
However, Bret Brady of Bare Bones Guide Service reported top-notch fishing on this most recent adventures at Oroville.
“Fishing has been fantastic,” said Brady. “We are catching rainbows up to 5 lbs. and kings up to 4.5 lbs. Rainbows are coming from 55–65 feet, while the kings are coming from 85–95 feet. Fish are in great condition and actively feeding.”
“There is very little fishing pressure,” he advised. “Focus on finding the bait—fish are concentrated wherever bait is present. Use Uncle Larry’s Pearl Squid (both colors), a 360 flasher in various colors, and a 5.5-inch dodger at 2–2.3 mph for best results.”
David Derby confirmed the excellent salmon and trout fishing on the lake on the Lake Oroville Fishing Reports Facebook Page:
“We caught five kings and three rainbows this morning west of the green bridge 80’ down. The fish were still biting when we left. We had a fun day,” he reported.
Meanwhile, Inspectors for DWR’s invasive mussel prevention program at Oroville found suspected golden mussels during a routine inspection of a pontoon boat on September 4.
“The pontoon was previously moored at the Pittsburg Marina and had been power washed prior to traveling to Oroville,” DWR reported in its weekly update. “Thanks to DWR’s mussel inspection program, the boat was prevented from launching at DWR’s Oroville facilities.”
“Staff immediately contacted the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) for further inspection and decontamination at another facility. The vessel was quarantined and will not be allowed to launch at a DWR reservoir until CDFW confirms that it is free of mussels,” DWR continued.
DWR launched its mandatory invasive mussel inspection program for the Oroville facilities – Lake Oroville, Thermalito Forebay, and Thermalito Afterbay – in May 2025. Inspection and vessel decontamination services remain free. More details about DWR’s mussel inspection program are available at water.ca.gov/mussels.
The launch ramp hours are daily from 7:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. at the Spillway and Bidwell Canyon ramps.
The Limesaddle and Loafer Creek facilities are open daily from 5 a.m. to 9 p.m.
The Thermalito Afterbay at Monument Hill ramp is open daily from 1.5 hours before sunrise to 1 hour after sunset.
The Thermalito Forebay at the North Forebay ramp is open daily from 8:00 a.m. to sunset.
Lake Oroville is holding 2,232,380 acre feet of water, 65 percent of capacity and 111 percent of average. The lake level is 811.51 feet in elevation.
- Dan Bacher